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Taking Advantage of Open Source PHP MySQL Applications |
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One obvious solution is to approach a software development
company and obtain a custom built product. However to take
this approach one needs to first know what features and functionality
is desired. Then on the other hand in some instances the need
does not warrant the cost of commissioning a custom application.
A plethora of free open source web applications exist today.
Regardless of the specific circumstances of the need these
applications can quite often prove to be a valuable resource.
http://freshmeat.net is one of the best online directories
of open source applications. A quick search on freshmeat.net
for say "intranet", "cms" or "groupware"
will yield pages of results. Browsing these results any application
marked beta, stable or mature is a possible solution. A large
majority of the available web applications would also state
PHP + MySQL as the platform.
Oh well I need to have some Linux Server and it's way too
hard is a common reaction. Fortunately this is not entirely
true. If you wanted to host a large scale production site
then the chances are that a custom Linux server may well be
a requirement. However just evaluating on your own PC, or
setting up a solution on your LAN for anywhere between 1 to
100 users can be easily realized without custom Linux servers.
The solution is in another open source free product known
as WAMP server. The acronym stands for Windows Apache MySQL
PHP server. WAMP is extremely simple to install and a good
platform for either evaluating PHP + MYSQL applications or
operating the same for up to a few hundred users.
Visit www.wampserver.com
Or www.wampserver.com/en/ for the English version
First it is important to note that most open source PHP +
MySQL applications will not run correctly on the latest versions
of PHP and MySQL. For this reason instead of the downloading
the latest version of WAMP server click on "downloads"
from the left menu and then click on "older versions
at sourceforge" This will take you to
https://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=116092
scroll down and select "WAMP5 1.4.3". Download the
WAMP5_1.4.3.exe file and install it on your computer with
default options.
Once installed and started a new icon will appear in the
icon tray near the date/time on your task bar. Left click
on this icon to activate it's menu which allows you to restart
or edit the configuration files.
Changing the web server port if necessary.
One common reason for wanting to edit configuration file
is in case you already have a web server running on the same
computer. In this case you would need to change the port address
used by apache to something other than 80. In this case 8080
would probably be a good alternative choice.
-------Changing the web server port address Begin-----------
Click on the WAMP server icon and from the menu under "config
files" select "httpd.conf". A long text file
will open up in notepad. In this file scroll down to the line
that reads "Port 80" and change this to read "Port
8080", Save the file and close notepad. Once again click
on the wamp server icon and select restart all services. One
more change needs to be made before we are done. In Windows
Explorer find the location where WAMP server was installed
which is by Default "C:\Wamp". Next goto the subfolder
named "www". Inside here you will see another subfolder
named "phpmyadmin". We are looking for a file named
"config.inc.php". In a default installation this
file will be at "C:\Wamp\www\phpmyadmin\config.inc.php".
Open this file in wordpad and find the line that reads
$cfg['PmaAbsoluteUri'] = 'localhost/phpmyadmin/';
Change this line to read:
$cfg['PmaAbsoluteUri'] = 'localhost:8080/phpmyadmin/';
-------Changing the web server port address End-----------
Now open a web browser and access http://localhost . Or if
you changed the port address to 8080 then goto http://localhost:8080/
You should be greeted by the WAMP welcome page. For each application
that you wish to install create a new folder inside the "www"
subfolder of where WAMP was installed. Lets assume that WAMP
was installed at "C:\Wamp".
Let say for example you wanted to install Mambo (www.mamboserver.com)
1) You would download the .zip or .tar.gz or .tar.bz2 file
and uncompress it using winzip or winrar into "c:\Wamp\www\mambo".
2) You would access the wamp welcome page http://localhost/
or http://localhost:8080/ and access phpmyadmin. In here you
would create a new database for mambo.
3) You would then access the wamp welcome page http://localhost/
or http://localhost:8080/ and from the list at the bottom
of the page you would click on Mambo
4) You would then be greeted by the mambo installer which
is a simple 5 step process. (the default username for MySQL
is root and the password is blank as in an empty string)
Let say for example you wanted to install oscommerce
You would download the .zip or .tar.gz or .tar.bz2 file and
uncompress it using winzip or winrar into "c:\Wamp\www\oscommerce".
1) You would access the wamp welcome page http://localhost/
or http://localhost:8080/ and access phpmyadmin. In here you
would create a new database for oscommerce.
2) You would then access the wamp welcome page http://localhost/
or http://localhost:8080/ and from the list at the bottom
of the page you would click on Mambo
3) You would then be greeted by the oscommerce installer which
is a simple process. (the default username for MySQL is root
and the password is blank as in an empty string)
And so on and so forth.
Any PHP + MySQL web application which does not provide an
automated installer is most likely not a very mature application.
About the Author:
Web Site Design and Development in Dot Net by Zap Strategy
Dot Net Web Site Design and Development by New Age Limited
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